The BBC was too late deleting a tweet that spoke volumes about its climate change reporting

On 24 July, Prof Stephen Belcher appeared on BBC Newsnight. As the Met Office’s chief scientist, he gave an expert opinion about the reasons behind soaring temperatures in Europe and around the world. But after the broadcast, the BBCtweeted:

“The heatwave that we’ve got is probably part of natural cycles in the weather” – The Chief Scientist at the Met Office, Stephen Belcher, explains the significance of this summer’s heatwave.

Although it subsequently deleted the tweet, it was too little, too late. The BBC needs to raise its game in reporting on climate change.

And the Newsnight segment gave a fair platform to climate-change experts. But in a now-deleted tweet, the BBC only reported half of Belcher’s opening analysis on Twitter, presenting the clip with the line:

The heatwave that we’ve got is probably part of natural cycles in the weather

As many have been quick to point out, the initial tweet was highly problematic. Some compared the BBC to America’s Fox News, which persistently misreports on the impact of global warming and climate change:

We saved so others can appreciate how you tried to deceive people. Who knew Andrew Neil's influence spread so far across BBC News output.

Others reminded the BBC that, in 2017, it broke Ofcom broadcasting rules when “climate sceptic” ex-chancellor Nigel Lawson appeared on Radio 4. And in 2014, the BBC had to answer a complaint after it failed to challenge Lawson’s views on climate change adequately on the Today programme.

Dear Newsnight – Could you please check if you have an elderly intern in your social media team with N.Lawson on his ID badge ?

As The Canary has previouslyreported, there have been vital and valid reasons to challenge the BBC‘s climate change coverage:

To encourage climate action in the UK requires a change in the way the BBC presents evidence on climate. As Dr David Robert Grimes emphasises in a 2016 article, impartiality is a crucial part of journalism. However, current reporting on climate change shows bias against the scientific consensus. Real balance would require 97% of coverage to favour scientists who recognise climate change.

Others have gone further and stated that frequent lack of balanced reporting actually makes the BBC complicit:

While the BBC has made climate-change reporting mistakes in the past, this Newsnight report should have been something to celebrate. The BBC tackled one of the planet’s most pressing issues and gave climate-change experts a fair platform. But it then completely undermined this, with a misleading and inaccurate tweet. Tick-tock BBC: time is literally running out.

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